The telegraph, much like the telephone, was improved upon multiple times, though the first one was invented in 1794 by Claude Chappe. It was non-electric though, and the maximum distance was two thousand feet. It was improved by Samuel Soemmering in 1809, William Sturgeon in 1825, Harrison Dyer in 1828, Joseph Henry in 1830, and William Cooke and Charles Wheatston in 1837. The first message using the the most advanced telegah, the one that was the staple of comunication for sixty years, was "What hath God wrought?" which was a verse from Numbers XXVIII line 13.
Assembly Line:
this is a picture of the smog-filled city of Manchester, England
Inventions as a result of Industrialization
Telegraph:
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_bhLTZLqJhr0/S9gqTMA3_VI/AAAAAAAAAC0/4XdTLVdNHRU/s1600/morse_telegraph_key.jpg
The telegraph, much like the telephone, was improved upon multiple times, though the first one was invented in 1794 by Claude Chappe. It was non-electric though, and the maximum distance was two thousand feet. It was improved by Samuel Soemmering in 1809, William Sturgeon in 1825, Harrison Dyer in 1828, Joseph Henry in 1830, and William Cooke and Charles Wheatston in 1837. The first message using the the most advanced telegah, the one that was the staple of comunication for sixty years, was "What hath God wrought?" which was a verse from Numbers XXVIII line 13.
Assembly Line:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_aRl8kJPIOog/SwLMoikKApI/AAAAAAAAABE/mJ6F57bMcPQ/s1600/krup_industrial_revolution.jpg
The assembly line was created by Henry Ford as a better way to invent heavy machinery. This, instead of the old process of everyone working individually, made each person specialize in a certain task, drasticaly reducing the amount of time spent building stuff such as cars.